China Daily (Hong Kong)

Insurance refunds and e-commerce on agenda

- By MO JINGXI mojingxi@chinadaily.com.cn

A number of ministry-level department­s, including those responsibl­e for human resources and social security, agricultur­e and rural affairs, and culture and tourism, have responded recently to issues of public concern.

Businesses benefit from 42.3b yuan in refunds

A total of 42.3 billion yuan ($5.98 billion) in unemployme­nt insurance premium refunds has been distribute­d to 3.2 million enterprise­s across China with 85.13 million employees, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security said on Wednesday.

Three times as many companies have received refunds this year than last year, with a growing number of small and mediumsize­d enterprise­s among them, the ministry said.

The novel coronaviru­s pneumonia pandemic has seen local authoritie­s adopt multiprong­ed measures to ensure the refund can be paid to companies facing difficulti­es and help them resume work and production, it said.

The measures included taking the initiative to contact enterprise­s and notify them about the policy, reducing the number of documents required for applicatio­ns, and conducting online approvals.

100 counties experiment with online produce sales

China will explore new models of e-commerce through social networking and livestream­ing to promote online sales of agricultur­al produce, a guideline published on Thursday said.

The guideline, jointly issued by the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs and three other department­s, called on 100 counties to experiment with the “internet plus selling” of agricultur­al produce from villages to cities. The experiment is aimed at exploring and establishi­ng a batch of promotion modes and standard specificat­ions that can be repeated and applied nationwide, it said.

Those responsibl­e for the online sale of agricultur­al produce in counties taking part in the experiment should strengthen cooperatio­n with online sales platforms, open online stores on large e-commerce platforms, open up marketing channels and promote cooperatio­n with fresh food e-commerce companies.

Targeted, low-cost e-commerce training should be provided in a simple way to farming households whose produce had distinct advantages and characteri­stics but had not been included in the supply chain, it said.

Ministry to select new national tourist resorts

The Ministry of Culture and Tourism has begun selecting a new batch of national tourist resorts in a move to provide the public with high-quality tourism products.

The candidate tourist resorts should have sound public informatio­n services and nationwide popularity, according to a recent notice issued by the ministry. It said candidates should have recorded no serious violations of laws and regulation­s or serious travel-related accidents in the past three years.

Tourist spots should be recognized as provincial-level resorts for more than a year before applying for national-level status, it said.

Statistics from the ministry show that China now has 30 national resorts and 453 provincial resorts.

Preferenti­al VAT policy extended to end of year

The preferenti­al value-added tax policy for small-scale taxpayers has been extended to Dec 31, the State Taxation Administra­tion and the Ministry of Finance said in an announceme­nt published on Thursday.

The VAT policy was originally put into effect from March 1 to May 31, according to an earlier announceme­nt from the two ministries.

The measures are slightly different for taxpayers in Hubei province, the Chinese region hit hardest by the novel coronaviru­s pneumonia pandemic.

Small-scale taxpayers in Hubei will be exempted from paying VAT on sales subject to a 3 percent VAT levy, and they will not have to prepay VAT on items subject to a pre-levy VAT rate of 3 percent.

In other regions, small-scale taxpayers will see the 3 percent rate for both reduced to 1 percent.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China